Monday, June 01, 2009

Child Trafficking: The cruel trade of West Africa's orphan-dealers

Children at an orphanage outside Monrovia

The recent rape of an eight-month-old boy in an orphanage in the Ghanaian capital Accra revealed conditions that child rights advocates say are rampant across West African orphanages. When the authorities investigated the incident they discovered 27 of the 32 children living in the home were not orphans.

A January 2009 study by the Social Welfare Department – responsible for children’s welfare and supervising orphanages – showed that up to 90 percent of the estimated 4,500 children in orphanages in Ghana are not orphans and 140 of the 148 orphanages around the country are un-licensed, said the department’s assistant director Helena Obeng Asamoah.

“We are alarmed at the extent to which the orphanages have abused the country’s child protection laws,” she told IRIN.

Accra-based child protection specialist with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Eric Okrah told IRIN: “Running an orphanage in Ghana has become a business enterprise, a highly lucrative and profitable venture.”

He added: “Children’s welfare at these orphanages has become secondary to the profit motive.”

In Ghana a small orphanage might have a budget of up to US$70,000 a year, depending on its size, the bulk of the funds coming from international donors and NGOs, with small contributions from local corporations, according to research by Ghanaian non-profit Child Rights International (CRI).

Donors are attracted to orphanages because they appear to be a simple solution, said Joachim Theis, UNICEF head of child protection for West Africa. “You have a building, you house children in it, it is easy to count them. And they are easy to fundraise for. It is a model that has been used for a long time. But it is the wrong model.”

After researching financing in several Ghanaian orphanages, CRI’s Bright Apiah surmised that as little as 30 percent of funds received are spent on child care.

Peace and Love Orphanage owner, Grace Amaboe, told IRIN profit is not her motive. “I go for these children on purely humanitarian grounds. It is absolutely false for anyone to suggest that I exploit these poor children…I am simply helping the children’s parents and have never used any children in my care for financial gain.”

Region-wide

UNICEF’s Theis said mis-categorisation of children as orphans affects thousands of children across West Africa, but statistics are scant and more research needs to be done to understand the problem.

Of the estimated 1,821 children living in orphanage care in Sierra Leone, UNICEF and child protection agencies have verified just 256 as having lost both parents.

One in eight Liberians is classified as a child missing one or both parents. But many of the estimated 5,800 estimated children in orphanages are reportedly not orphans, according to local child rights activists.

Poverty

Across the region some orphanage staff target deprived, rural communities and “exploit the poverty and ignorance of parents” by promising them money and offering to fund their children’s education, CRI’s Apiah said.

Some parents unwittingly sign documents giving up their right to legal custody of their child, said the Ghana Social Welfare Department’s Asamoah; many of those signing are illiterate.

Maame Serwah, 40, sent her 10-year-old son to the Peace and Love Orphanage because she did not have the means to raise him. “It was even difficult to feed myself. I just could not handle the painful sight of him almost always crying. I believed the orphanage was a way out.”

But since learning of the abuse, she approached the Social Welfare Department to retrieve him. “I now…need my son, I will do whatever it takes to raise him myself,” she told IRIN.

In some West African countries, families have a tradition of putting their children in the care of relatives or caretakers if this means the chance of a better education or of work, but some orphanages exploit this tradition, Theis said. “When parents sign a form from an orphanage, they have no conception of giving up their children forever…The concept of never seeing their child again is inconceivable.”

System failure

As awareness of the problem increases governments and child protection agencies in some countries are working to improve regulation.

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has created a special committee on adoption of Liberian children, one of whose tasks will be to examine orphanage practices.

Ghana’s Social Welfare Department, with help from child protection agencies such as UNICEF, is drawing up guidelines on orphan critieria and orphanage conditions, and promoting alternative programmes to orphan care.

Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Social Welfare, Gender and Children’s Affairs is also strengthening orphanage standards and auditing orphanages nationwide, which has forced many to close, according to UNICEF.

But governments must also enforce existing legislation, Apiah said. Ghana’s 1998 Children’s Act stipulates that orphanages must present annual audit reports to the Social Welfare Department in order to renew their licenses, but most orphanages do not comply, he said.

“The problem stems from…systemic failure, which encourages the proliferation of unlicensed and unmonitored orphanage,” Apiah said. “These problems will be there as long as we continue to lack a firm social safety net to support poor parents to raise their children.”

Supporting such safety nets – giving vulnerable families cash transfers, paying for children’s education or healthcare – can influence a family’s decision as to whether or not to keep their child, said UNICEF’s Theis.

“A range of solutions, from safety nets to foster care to community care, have been shown to work, and are much cheaper than putting children in orphanages,” he said. “Putting children into institutionalised care instead of a family setting must always be a last resort. “

Disclaimer:This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States.
Photo: Copyright IRIN
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Azerbaijan: Russia ready to construct nuclear power plant in Azerbaijan

Itar-Tass/IRNA -- Russia may take part in the construction of a nuclear power plant in Azerbaijan, Russian Federation's Deputy Energy Minister Vyacheslav Sinyugin said in an interview with the Baku-based ANS television channel.

He stressed, "Russia is ready to give Azerbaijan its proposals and ideas" on the nuclear power plant construction.

The Russian Federation deputy energy minister noted that Russia 'has vast experience and potentials in the atomic energy industry' and is implementing many overseas projects in this sphere. "We believe that these projects are competitive enough," said Sinyugin.
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Slovakia: Increase in attacks and political racism directed against Jews, Roma and Hungarian minorities

By Pavol Stracansky -IPS
Republished permission Inter Press Service (IPS ) copyright Inter Press Service (IPS)
www.ipsnewsasia.net and www.ipsnews.net

The Council of Europe has warned in a report that attacks and political racism directed against Jews, Roma and Hungarian minorities have increased since the far-right Slovak National Party joined the government in 2006.

The report by the Council's European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) says Slovak political leaders have failed to condemn a string of incidents of political racism, including anti-Semitic abuse of MPs in Parliament. The Strasbourg-based Council of Europe is a 47-country grouping independent of the EU, and seeks to promote legal and human rights worldwide.

Minority rights groups are calling on the government to publicly crack down on racism because they say that a perceived tolerance of racist attacks entrenches and encourages racism.

"Politicians need to be standing up, giving condemnation and resolutely acting when there are racist attacks," Stano Daniel from the Milan Simecka Foundation, a human rights organisation, told IPS. "People see a politician making racist statements and may think, why should I be any different?"

The ECRI report heavily criticises the government over a "worrying" recent rise in racist political discourse.

Minority rights groups say the report highlights government reluctance to deal with racism, and the effect of that reluctance on societal tolerance of anti-minority sentiment.

They point to growing anti-Hungarian rhetoric from some senior government figures, and say politicians now freely fuel anti-Hungarian sentiment among the population because they know it can win votes.

"Much of the political racism among Slovak politicians today is focused on Hungarians. Politicians know that saying something bad about Roma is a political 'no-no' as people will be ready to criticise them for it. But attacking the Hungarian minority is very popular at the moment. Politicians know they can win votes with that," says Daniel.

Almost a tenth of Slovakia's roughly five million population is ethnic Hungarian. Many members of the Hungarian minority in Slovakia complain of prejudice in political parties and in society.

The most vocally anti-Hungarian party is the far-right SNS. It became part of a three-party coalition, along with Smer and the Movement for a Democratic Slovakia (HZDS) after the 2006 elections.

It has since seen its popularity soar. In a voter support poll published in Slovak media last week it was the third most popular party, with 9.7 percent support.

Its coalition partner, the centre-right HZDS, has in the past been vociferously anti-Hungarian. While in power in the 1990s it introduced a series of nationalistic laws, including legislation on official languages, widely seen as discriminatory against the Hungarian minority.

The Smer party, overwhelmingly the most popular in the country, has also since coming to power in 2006 adopted increasingly anti-Hungarian political rhetoric. A series of diplomatic conflicts with Hungary has left relations between the two states severely strained.

Minority rights groups say the government is also slow to condemn racism against Roma, Slovakia's other significant minority. The Roma, called Gypsies by some, are a people who are believed to have migrated to Europe from India since the 14th century.

Several studies have estimated that there are about 400,000 Roma in Slovakia. Almost all complain of prejudice at all levels of society.

"There is a general atmosphere in society that this is acceptable," Klara Orgovanova of the independent Roma Institute told IPS. "Politicians need to stand up and condemn it, and to say that it is unacceptable, if this is ever going to change."

"People like Dusan Caplovic, the deputy prime minister for minorities, make comments about Roma suggesting Roma children are all on drugs or that they need to be beaten up by their fathers to give them discipline, which is totally unacceptable," Daniel told IPS. "It just makes the situation with racism in Slovakia worse."

The Slovak government has rejected the ECRI's criticism. While saying it would take note of the report's findings, it said the ECRI had failed to take into account new legislation on anti-discrimination and a new government action plan on tackling racism, intolerance and discrimination.

Dusan Caplovic said in a statement given to IPS: "The report is an example of the critical approach to human rights politics which is common in reports from expert bodies focusing mainly on negative phenomena in individual countries. Protecting the rights of minorities is a long-term, dynamically changing process which has to be constantly refined."
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Turkey: Turkey determined to be active holder of U.N. Security Council Presidency

FOCUS Information Agency: Turkey is determined to be an active holder of the United Nations Security Council Presidency, said Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoglu, cited by the Anatolian Agency.

“This is very important and a big responsibility for our country,” the minister said.

Before heading to New York, Davutoglu noted that this time not only the actions of the Security Council, but also all issues of the international system would be under Turkey’s supervision. Within a month Turkey will play the most active role in giving answers and decision-making on various key international issues – the problems with North Korea and Iraq.
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Swat Valley: AfPak war has devastating effect on north-west Pakistan

By James Cogan - World Socialist Web Site

AfPak war depopulates and devastates north-west Pakistan

A little over a month ago, the Pakistani government acquiesced to the demands of the Obama administration to use brute force to eradicate radical Islamist influence in the north-west of the country, as part of the so-called AfPak war to secure American interests in Central Asia. The human cost and long-term political consequences are now becoming clear.

The Pakistani military claimed over the weekend that it had largely shattered the armed opposition in the Swat Valley, Lower Dir and Buner districts of North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

The pivotal victory has been the seizure of Mingora, the largest city in the Swat Valley. After a week or more of fighting, Pakistani troops reportedly control most of the central business district and the surrounding suburbs. Military spokesmen claim that after the insurgents lost 286 dead, the survivors escaped and have shaved off their trade-mark beards so as to melt into the civilian population.

Journalists and camera crews have been given controlled access to Mingora since Wednesday and been able to file both print and video reports on the state of the city. Al Jazeerah footage, for example, showed abandoned streets apart from Pakistani troops, and numerous damaged or destroyed buildings where the Islamist fighters had allegedly manned firing positions.

The Pakistani Dawn reported: “The town of over 300,000 people, once a hub for tourists, was as silent as a graveyard because of a curfew and massive displacement. Helicopters were hovering and security forces were guarding the main intersections. Markets wore a deserted look with many buildings and shops carrying marks of shells and bullets, showing the intensity of the fighting. Hotels and shops were also targeted.”

According to the Dawn and various news agencies, Mingora’s electricity grid and telecommunications network has been damaged; water services and sewage systems are dysfunctional; the police force has largely deserted; and there are severe food shortages. It is unlikely therefore that Mingora’s hundreds of thousands of displaced citizens can return in the near future.

Fighting is still reportedly taking place in areas around the central Swat town of Kalam and in the mountainous areas in the west of the district. The Secretary of Defence, Syed Athar Ali, told Reuters on Sunday: “Hopefully within the next two to three days these pockets of resistance will be cleared.” Overall, the Pakistani government claims that more than 1,200 anti-government fighters have been killed. Less than 100 have been captured, suggesting a “take no prisoners” policy has been applied.

Sufi Mohammad and Maulana Fazlullah, the main leaders of the Swat Islamist movement which is often wrongly described as belonging to the Taliban, have not been reported killed or captured. The Swat Islamists belong to Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM), or the Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Law, which has led a local insurrection largely driven by anger over inequality and poverty.

There is no estimate of how many civilians have lost their lives as a result of the military offensive against TNSM. Government claims that they are negligible, however, are contradicted by the few on-the-spot reports coming out of Buner, Lower Dir and the Swat Valley.

A Washington Post report on May 27, for example, quoted internally displaced persons (IDPs) claiming they had witnessed multiple civilian fatalities caused by military bombing. A man from Lower Dir claimed 340 homes in his village had been destroyed by an air attack.

Just in the town of Dager, in Buner district, the Red Cross has treated 240 war wounded. A hospital in Peshawar had taken in 50 in one week. The Pakistan military reported that it has treated 6,177 patients at hospitals near Islamabad and 1,371 at another facility.

The number of wounded indicates a significant death toll. Without timely medical treatment, a large proportion of people injured by shrapnel, bullets or burns generally die from shock, blood loss or infection.

Underscoring the social conditions that lie behind the Islamist-led rebellions against the government, the UN’s World Food Program reported on Sunday that 45 million of Pakistan’s 172 million people are undernourished, with the worst conditions facing people in the less developed regions of the tribal agencies, NWFP, Balochistan and parts of Sindh. In some areas, close to one third of the population are undernourished. Poverty has soared since the 1990s, when 26 million were considered so poor they could not adequately feed themselves.

Social conditions have been made vastly worse by the military operation in NWFP. It has not only emptied Mingora, but driven out most of the ethnic Pashtun population in the three districts targeted. The current UN estimate is that 2.4 million people have been internally displaced in just over a month, making it the largest displacement on the Indian subcontinent since the 1947 partition.

The mass exodus has taken place during the harvest season, meaning that thousands of small farmers who could barely subsist before the offensive have not been able to bring in their crops. As well, large numbers of livestock have died or been lost.

As many as 500,000 IDPs are sheltering with relatives or sympathetic strangers in the district of Mardan, to the south of the war zone. Hundreds of thousands have sought refuge with their families in Peshawar, the capital of NWFP, or in neighbouring districts. Large numbers have fled even further, seeking sanctuary outside NWFP in major cities such as Karachi, the main city in Sindh province and Pakistan’s financial and economic hub.

The people supporting the IDPs are being plunged into hardship. Numerous households are sheltering four or five displaced families, with people sleeping 10 to 15 to a room and as many as 35 sharing a single toilet. Graham Strong, of World Vision, told the Pakistani International News: “They are sharing their homes, food, clothes and water. They are poor already and are making themselves poorer in the process. As the disaster continues, hosts are having to sell their land, cattle and other assets at far less than market value to keep providing for their guests.”

Tens of thousands of IDPs have been forced into overcrowded and unsanitary refugee camps. A tent city in Malakand district, which borders the Swat Valley, is housing up to 50,000 people. A UN camp on the outskirts of Peshawar has taken in 50,000 to 70,000. Similar-sized camps have been established in the Mardan and Swabi districts.

As well as the immense human cost, the assault into the Swat Valley is fueling ethnic tensions. The arrival of Pashtun IDPs in Sindh has been met with reactionary strikes and protests by Sindhi chauvinists, who have demanded that the refugees be forcibly prevented from entering the province. In Karachi, which has a minority Pashtun population of some 3 million living among 18 million people, there is the danger of extensive communalist conflict.

The military operations have also provoked revenge attacks. Security force installations in Lahore were bombed last Wednesday, killing some 30 people. The following day, a bomb was detonated at a market in Peshawar and a suicide bomber attacked a police checkpoint in the NWFP town of Dera Ismail Khan.

The violence, instability and suffering will only escalate if, as appears increasingly likely, the government bows to US demands to carry out a full-scale offensive against the strongholds of the Pakistani Taliban in the tribal agencies of South and North Waziristan.

The two agencies, which are almost entirely under the control of anti-government militias, are used as a safe haven by Pashtun fighters from over the border in Afghanistan who are resisting the US/NATO occupation of that country. While targets in the agencies are being repeatedly bombed by unmanned US Predator drones, the cross-border movement has barely been disrupted.

An unnamed Western security official working in Pakistan told the McClatchy news agency on the weekend: “Waziristan is at the heart of Western counter-terrorism interests in this region.” A Pakistani onslaught on the militants in Waziristan, he said, would “hit the sweet spot for us”.

Javed Hussain, a former commander of Pakistani special forces, told McClatchy that a “hammer-and-anvil” operation was being contemplated. US troops would deploy in force as the “anvil,” sealing the Afghan border, while Pakistani forces moved into Waziristan as the hammer.

Pakistani troops—not American—will therefore serve as Obama’s cannon fodder in bloody battles with an estimated 15,000 Taliban fighters. In exchange, the venal Pakistani ruling elites represented by President Asif Ali Zadari and Prime Minister Yousaf Gilani will get the financial assistance they need to stave off economic collapse.
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South Ossetia: Longtime separatist leader's huge lead in elections

Initial results from South Ossetia's first parliamentary election since last year's war give the main party backing longtime separatist leader Eduard Kokoity a huge lead.

Early returns in the breakaway Georgian region say the Unity party is far in front of three other parties for control of the 34-seat parliament. Voter turnout was high and final results are expected Monday.

Opposition leaders called for an election boycott, accusing Kokoity of stifling dissent and intimidating his critics.

They also accuse Kokoity, a former Russian wrestling champion, of stealing reconstruction money sent by Russia.

Kokoity defended the election, calling it, in his words, "a test of our people's maturity" and "a test of the stability of our democracy."

Agencies
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Burma: Burma's government in exile changing its strategy

Burma's government in exile says it is changing its strategy to reach democracy, following the military government's decision to prosecute Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. Tensions in Rangoon are reported to be rising as the trial progresses.

The government in exile, the National Coalition Government for the Union of Burma, says it will announce its new strategy for a transitional process to democracy in late June. It says the trial of opposition-leader Aung San Suu Kyi has undermined the credibility of the military's planned 2010 elections.

A representative for the government in exile, Thaung Htun, says the new plan will ask all stakeholders to to join a credible political process."

"Aung San Suu Kyi is the key partner for dialogue, the key person for reconciliation," said Thaung Htun. "The regional players in the international community should say in one voice that 2010 election planned by the regime - if it is not inclusive - if it excludes Aung San Suu Kyi and other key ethnic leaders and the key stakeholders - that stand has to be made clear. After that in cooperation with the U.N. Secretary General, the regional players should have to push for a real inclusive democratic transition in Burma."

Thaung Htun says tensions are rising in Rangoon before the verdict, amid stepped up security and fears of public unrest if Aung San Suu Kyi is found guilty. She is charged for breaching her house detention order. The case is seen as a pretext for extending her detention and preventing her from participating in next year's elections.

On Sunday, the military government defended its prosecution of Aung SanSuu Kyi, saying that no one in the country is "above the law" and warned other countries against "meddling in the internal affairs of Burma".

Diplomatic efforts to pressure Burma's military towards reform and to release political prisoners have accelerated with the trial.

Several countries, including the United States and the European Union, have sanctions imposed on the military, while a broad range of countries, including Asian states, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia and and the Philippines have called for Aung San Suu Kyi's release.

A verdict in her case is expected Friday. If found guilty the 1991 Nobel laureate faces up to five years in jail. She has spent 13 of the past 19 years under detention.


Published with the permission of Voice of America
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Chechnya: Special forces scouring the Caucasus in hunt for militants

Police and special forces are scouring the forests of the Caucasus in a hunt for militants. The operation began two weeks ago following a bombing in the Chechen capital Grozny.

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Brazil: FIFA announces host cities for the 2014 World Cup

Xinhua reports Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Brasilia are among the 12 Brazilian cities selected as host cities for the 2014 World Cup, soccer's world governing body FIFA said on Sunday.

Brazil was originally scheduled to pick 10 host cities. However, after a strong campaign by the Brazilian government and the Brazilian Confederation of Soccer, FIFA agreed to increase by two.

Without any big surprises, the official host cities are: Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Belo Horizonte, Porto Alegre, Curitiba, Brasilia, Cuiaba, Salvador, Recife, Fortaleza, Natal and Manaus.

Rio de Janeiro will host the final, while Sao Paulo and Belo Horizonte are competing to host the opening match.
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Corruption: British MPs expenses scandal - the con of electoral reform

Pravda: This week saw the unveiling of a major speech by UK opposition leader, conservative David Cameron, on proposed electoral reform to protect voters coming in the wake of the seemingly never ending stream of stories revealed in the media about members of parliament abusing taxpayer’s money to pad their expenses.

It was a predictable political path to tread.

Politicians ripping off the taxpayer was always going to be a red hot issue especially in the midst of a recession, and the across the board feeling of anger amongst the voters was inevitably ripe for both political main parties to opportunistically try to capitalise upon.

David Cameron appears to be leading the way on this so far although it would surely be difficult for the governing Labour Party under Prime Minister Gordon Brown to do, as the incumbent party who have been in power for the last three elections in a row.

Much as John McCain's campaign found out in the recent US presidential election, it simply lacks the same credibility to be leading the calling for change when you have been in power for the last few years anyway during the time all the bad stuff seems to have happened.

But in the Obama era, the mantra of change is one that every political party the world over is trying on for size now, having witnessed his success running on that message there.

Suddenly every man and his dog, who wants to seek public office, is peddling the ticket of how they are the ones who are going to right all the long-standing wrongs and injustices within the system.

In truth, virtually no one banging his drum in the UK right now is offering the public very much real change at all.

Even more strange again is that the version of this that David Cameron wants the public to buy into is in reality little more than the same message of smaller government/more local and individual authority that conservatives have always put forward for decades.

His conservative cohorts in the US right now are using exactly the same philosophy to try to derail Barack Obama, even though with his 65% approval rating in the polls there it seems to be gaining little traction so far.

Even some prominent conservatives themselves in America seem unsure if they are on board with it.

Last week saw Colin Powel express the view that in times of a recession and great uncertainty, often what people really want is more firm government and the leadership that this provides to steer things back to a better place.

Notwithstanding that, the con behind Cameron’s rhetoric of supposed electoral reform lies in the unpleasant reality that historically less government, with ensuing greater power for the individual (in theory at least), commonly translates into the little more than whatever power the government gives up then being shipped directly into the hands of yet another powerful minority – only this time it’s the wealthy, equally elite business classes, who under no circumstances are ever going to mirror the needs of ordinary individuals or local communities around the country.

Even if we assume that he is right and what the left have created in Britain is a power grab for a centralised government run by the elite few, then we surely should also suspect that what he is offering in it’s place is little more than the very same thing only this time with the power shifting into the hands of his cronies instead of theirs.

For their part, the left under Gordon Brown and the Labour Party appear to be offering even less with so far no more than vague promises to change things and listen to anyone who can help.

Where exactly then is this real change going to come from that will put power back into the hands of ordinary folks?

It seems that only the relatively small third-wheel in British politics offers an answer to this, with the Liberal Party once again proposing that a fundamental change away from the long enshrined first past the post voting method over to proportional representation system could actually bring this about.

As a voting system already in use widely within the European Union, it appears to be the only real tangible alternative anyone has put on the table so far.

And with governments often being formed in the UK with as little as 20-30% of the vote cast, then it seems like potentially a real step forward.

Astonishingly enough though, when confronted about supporting the introduction of proportional representation into Britain, David Cameron immediately shot it down and made it clear that the Conservative Party would never support this.

Little wonder indeed!

There’s nothing like a bit of electoral reform just as long as long as we don’t actually put too much power in the hands of the people.

Cameron’s bright new era of change to give everyone more say is ultimately little more than telling the voters that they can choose any colour they wish as long as it’s blue.

The saddest part of this of course is that the one political party who is actually proposing any real change is the one with the least support amongst the British electorate.

In their anger at the large sums of money their elected officials have essentially picked from their pockets dishonestly with every imaginable bogus expense claim every thought up, the voters are seemingly paying the least attention to the one group there who could actually help them make sure this does not happen again.

To resolve this, the issue of how people vote in the UK and have their voices heard has to become a non-party issue completely, much akin to how the Green issue did with the environment.

That will help add weight and credence to it as something that the public will not simply sweep under the carpet merely because it will never happen anyway due to being pushed by a party no one will ever put in power.

Outside of that however the ball is very much in their court.

The British public can get mad now and do little about it ultimately or they can get mad now and put that entirely understandable feeling of resentment to good use by supporting a change in the way things get done that has probably been long overdue anyway.

By John Bourke - Pravda
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West Bank: Jewish settlers say they are only following orders - God's

Sourced from AFP. Criticism over Israeli settlements in the West Bank is absurd since God gave this land to the Jews, says Rabbi Yaakov Savir. The Arabs, he says, should make their home elsewhere.

‘This territory is Jewish territory,’ says Savir, a settler who runs a religious school in the Havat Gilad outpost which consists of little more than a few tin huts and weather-worn trailers, some horses and chickens and several car wrecks.

‘This is our home,’ he says, making a sweeping gesture towards the Jewish settlements that dominate nearby hilltops to show he means the entire West Bank, which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day-War.

‘We must settle here, God has ordered us to live on this land,’ says Daniel Landesberg, 20,

Havat Gilad, which 20 families call home, is a wildcat outpost, meaning that unlike full-scale settlements, it is not authorised by the Israeli government.The international community considers all settlements illegal.
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Iran: More violence in Balochistan

By B.RAMAN
See also www.southasiaanalysis.org


A report received on May 31,2009, from a source believed to be based in Zahidan, the capital of the Iranian province of Sistan-Balochistan, speaks of an exchange of fire between groups of Shias and Sunnis in different parts of Zahidan following an unsuccessful attempt by unidentified persons to kill Mulla Abdol Hamid, a senior Sunni leader. While he survived the attack, many of his body guards were reportedly imjured.

2.According to the Government controlled IRNA news agency, three persons were injured on May 29,2009, when unidentified gunmen attacked the election office of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Zahidan. Ahmadinejad is contesting re-election as the President. The polling is scheduled for June 12,2009.

3.Meanwhile, the Iranian authorities have blamed the US and Israel for the suicide attack in a Shia mosque on May 28,2009. They have already announced the hanging in public in Zahidan of three persons in connection with the attack. While the authorities have accused them of having been involved in the attack, independent reports claim that these persons were already in the custody of the police when the suicide attack took place in the mosque.

4.Jalal Sayah, Deputy Governor-General of Sistan-Balochistan, has been quoted by the semi-official Fars news agency as saying: “Three people involved with the terrorist incident were arrested.According to the information obtained, they were hired by America and the agents of the arrogance.” Interior Minister Sadegh Mahsooli said: “The terror agents are neither Sunni nor Shia but Americans and Israelis seeking a Shia-Sunni divide." The Agence France Presse has quoted Ian Kelly, a spokesman of the US State Department, as saying: “The US strongly condemns all forms of terrorism. We do not sponsor any form of terrorism in Iran and we continue to work with the international community to try to prevent any attacks against innocent civilians anywhere.”

The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.
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Nepal: Government urged to follow Court judgment on disappearances

The United Nations human rights office in Nepal today encouraged the fledgling Government to take action on a watershed Supreme Court decision, made two years ago, calling for an investigation into those behind scores of disappearances during the South Asian nation''s decade-long civil war.

In its 1 June 2007 judgment, the Court directed the Government to “take immediate measures to address the needs of victims and ensure accountability for conflict-related disappearances,” the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Nepal (OHCHR-Nepal) said in a news release.

OHCHR-Nepal called on the Government to use the anniversary of the Court''s ruling to implement the judgment, addressing the “rights of victims of disappearances to truth, justice and reparations.”

In December, OHCHR reported that at least 170 men and women vanished in the Bardiya district of Nepal between 2001 and 2003 during the conflict, which claimed an estimated 13,000 lives and ended in 2006 with the Government and the Maoists signing a peace deal.

OHCHR said that 156 of the disappearances came after arrests by – the now former – Government security forces loyal to the Monarchy and 14 were taken by the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M) army.

Among its measures the Court ordered the Government to establish a commission of inquiry consistent with international standards criminalize enforced disappearance investigate and prosecute those responsible for disappearances and provide adequate compensation and relief to victims and their families.

“The Supreme Court''s landmark 2007 decision established the standard by which to judge initiatives to criminalize and prosecute the crime of disappearances and to provide truth, justice and reparations to the victims,” said OHCHR-Nepal Representative Richard Bennett.

“By prioritizing the passage of a disappearance law consistent with the Court''s judgment, the new Government can clearly show its commitment to ending impunity and addressing the needs of victims of the conflict.”
Published by Mike Hitchen, Mike Hitchen Consulting
Putting principles before profits

Abortion" U.S. Attorney General condemns slaying of Dr George Tiller

The U.S. Attorney General has issued a statement in regard to the murder of a doctor who provided late-term abortions in Kansas. Dr. George Tiller, who had suffered decades of protests and attacks, was shot and killed on Sunday in a church where he was serving as an usher.
The gunman fled, but a 51-year-old suspect was arrested 170 miles away in Kansas City three hours after the shooting,

"The murder of Doctor George Tiller is an abhorrent act of violence, and his family is in our thoughts and prayers at this tragic moment. Federal law enforcement is coordinating with local law enforcement officials in Kansas on the investigation of this crime, and I have directed the United States Marshals Service to offer protection to other appropriate people and facilities around the nation. The Department of Justice will work to bring the perpetrator of this crime to justice. As a precautionary measure, we will also take appropriate steps to help prevent any related acts of violence from occurring."

Source: U.S. Department of Justice
Published by Mike Hitchen, Mike Hitchen Consulting
Putting principles before profits